SF novel about an astronomer recruited by a senatorial candidate to develop MHD, magnetohydrodynamics, as a cheaper alternative to nuclear power.
 Tor’s site has this description with a PDF excerpt.
 Amazon’s “Look Inside” function also provides a preview.

Military SF novel, ninth and final novel in the “Legion of the Damned” series following When Duty Calls (2009).
 The author’s site has a complete list of his books.
 Amazon’s “Look Inside” function provides a preview.

Fantasy novel, published in Russian in 1997 and here translated by Elinor Huntington, about a guardsman who kills an innocent student in a duel and is subsequently cursed with a scar across his face.
 Wikipedia has this entry on the authors, noting that this novel is sequel to their first work, The Gate-Keeper (1994), which was named “Best Debut Work” at EuroCon in 1995.
 Tor’s site has this description with a video trailer.
 Amazon’s “Look Inside” function provides a preview.

Far future space opera novel, third in a series following The January Dancer (2008) and Up Jim River (2010).
 Tor’s website has this description.
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Amazon’s “Look Inside” function provides an excerpt.
 The Publishers Weekly review gave it a star, concluding, “Space opera fans will be swept away by the poetic rhythm and subtle plot construction, and the open-ended conclusion will leave them clamoring for future Donovan buigh adventures.”

“Gaslamp fantasy” novel, second a series following Agathat H. and the Airship City (2011), about a hapless Transylvania Polygnostic University student, Agatha Clay, whose abduction aboard an airship sparks her special genius.
 Night Shade’s site has this description.
 Amazon’s “Look Inside” function provides an excerpt.
 Publishers Weekly gave it a starred review: “Expansive descriptions of places and mechanisms, delightful characterization of creatures human, near human, and thoroughly mechanical, and an inventive, high-drama story line make this an immersive yet lighthearted and delightful bit of adventurous fun.”

Fantasy novel, sixth in the “Kencyrath” series (or the “God Stalker Chronicles”) following God Stalk (1982), Dark of the Moon (1985), Seeker’s Mask (1994), To Ride a Rathorn (2006), and Bound in Blood (2010), about various peoples brought together by the Three-Faced God to battle chaos.
 Baen’s site has this description with links to several chapters.

Anthology of 16 original urban fantasy stories. Authors include Charlaine Harris, Patricia Briggs, Lisa Tuttle, S.M. Stirling, and Carrie Vaughn.
 Amazon’s “Look Inside” function provides a preview, including the table of contents.
 Rich Horton’s review last year in Locus Magazine said: “But that’s all that matters, in a way: one masterwork like Bradley Denton’s ‘The Adakian Eagle’, one of the best stories of the year so far, would justify a book of duds, and Down These Strange Streets is not that.”

Nonfiction autobiography of the science fiction author whose first novel was Spacetime Donuts (1981) and whose later books included Software (1982), winner of a Philip K. Dick Award, The Sex Sphere (1983), Wetware (1988), also winner of a Philip K. Dick Award, collection Transreal! (1991), and most recently novel Jim and the Flims (2011).
 Tor’s site has this description with blurbs and an excerpt.
 The author has this page for the book, with links to photos, to a 600Mb file of notes, and quotes from reviews.

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